The World's Worst PowerPoint Presentations

Most of you have probably had to make a PowerPoint presentation, so you probably know the basic PowerPoint rules: Use a lot of bullet points.
Don't overdo the text. Avoid multimedia excesses. Et cetera.

It might seem like pretty basic stuff to you, oh PowerPoint Guru, but unfortunately it's not so obvious to some other people. We took a stroll through
the PowerPoint presentation-sharing site, Slideshare.net, and found a scarily large number of really bad PowerPoint presentations. Here are some of the
worst (or should we say best?) ones of the bunch.

Images and Text Do Not Mix

This PowerPoint presentation on cars (we know it's about
cars because an introductory slide consists of the word "CARS" in huge, garish orange-and-blue letters) puts all of its images in the background (after
applying a little tasteful fading), with paragraphs of text overlaid on them. This accomplishes the difficult feat of making the images hard to look at and the
text hard to read. Perfect--a lose-lose situation!

The presenter could have consolidated the text in one part of the image, using the image's horizontal guiding lines; but that didn't happen, so the slide
manages to look sloppy as well as unreadable. Bonus points for misspelling "carburetor."

To Be Fair, Social Networking Is Complicated

The first rule of flow charts is that they should be intelligible. In a presentation, you do have a chance to explain what's going on, but a good PowerPoint series makes sense on its own. The flow
chart presented here is simply baffling--and the pictures don't help much. What's going where? Who's getting what? What's the difference between a one
in a big black square and a one in a little red circle? What is a "follower feed"? And why are the some of the "salmon" going downstream?

Nor does this social networking slideshow rally after the
incoherent flow chart: It later shows a series of e-mail screen caps that are ugly at best, and incomprehensible at worst.

A Symmetrical Rainbow of Confusion

Colors are great for attracting
an audience. But stick with two or three--not six or seven--and use them consistently. The colors in this "social business map" don't clarify anything.
Why are "Social Web" and "Social Enterprise" in different colors but "Cloud/SaaS" and "On-Premise" in the same color? Why do blue and green
diamonds populate orange and white areas as well as blue and green areas? Why does "Trend" appear as two converging white areas while "Standards"
appears as a single vanishing brown area?

The whole chart looks like an alien Venn diagram, and the big labels along the bottom appear in random colors that correspond to nothing else on the
chart. Why?

Flow Chart on Steroids

The left side of this PowerPoint slide on customer lifetime value in service contracts does pretty well (If you overlook the iffy capitalization, the wacky punctuation, and the
inconsistent framing of the "Modeling issues"): The text is in short bullet points, colors and
fonts are restrained, and the presenter used a basic slide template (when in doubt, use a template!).

But then we get to the flow chart. Presumably the red arrows are there to explain what's going on in the maze of black arrows. The red arrows are
somewhat helpful, except for the jarring overlay of red on black. As for the 10,000 black arrows, they probably make a point, or something, but
really?

The Endless "Summary"

Filling an entire PowerPoint slide with text is never a great idea--especially not when the content is printed in 10-point type and is three or four times
longer than the Gettysburg Address. Even worse is the idea of using an impenetrable slab of 10-point text to provide an "executive
summary" of the ensuing presentation. It's hard to imagine what useful thing the presenter thought this slide would accomplish--no one is going to
want to read the text, and if the presenter does so, what's left to say in the presentation?

The most chilling part of this cautionary tale? The audience hasn't even seen the entire "executive summary" yet--it continues on the next slide.

100 Graphs in One Little Slide

Graphs and charts are usually PowerPoint presentation gold: They're visual, informative, and hard to screw up. So, obviously, the more graphs and
charts, the better--right? Like, say, 100 graphs and charts. And to sweeten that deal, let's put all 100 of 'em on one slide. What could go wrong?

Or rather, what couldn't go wrong? The whole PowerPoint presentation on lung cancer surgery is pretty bad, but this slide showing 100 charts neatly stacked like coffins in a ten-by-ten array
takes the cake. Not only are the graphs so small as to be unreadable, but did we mention there are 100 of them? Oh, and a slide heading that makes
sense in English would've been nice.

Slides With Ads--Are They Clickable?

What's worse than using generic Microsoft clip art in a PowerPoint
presentation? Using a Web banner ad as the top image across all of the slides--that's what. The creator of this presentation about a "snoring solution" didn't even
bother to crop off the "Special Offer: Order Now" part of the graphic (which looks as though it were made to run on Yahoo Chat pages, circa
1999).

Hey, we're all for blatantly touting your Website during a PowerPoint presentation (though you really should limit your self-promotion to the first or
last slide--not both--or you may induce shill fatigue), but decorating a presentation with your company's online banner ads is pretty cheesy.

The Case of the Invisible Text

PowerPoint slide transitions are best left to the fourth-grade science fair crowd. But if you insist on using them (don't say we didn't warn you), make
sure that your text doesn't behave like a Cheshire cat.

In a PowerPoint presentation on the future
of learning technology, the slides leading up to this one (slide 18) are visually interesting and don't overdo the text or graphs. But slide 18 contains
three bullet-type points that appear and then disappear as the presenter clicks through it. The only thing worse than putting multiple paragraphs of text into
a slide is putting up text that vanishes unexpectedly. It's supposed to be a visual aid, not a magic show.

As a rule of thumb, if you have to resize your text to 12- or 10-point type to get it to fit, you have too much text. This presentation on social
media is a great example of bullet points gone bad. The text is tiny, the bullet points are longer than ten words each, and at least one of them is a
full-fledged paragraph.